Alert: 19th August 2013 - Protest in solidarity with hunger striker Alaa Hammad and the other 25 Jordanians in Israeli prisons

After 100 days on hunger strike 4 of the 5 Jordanian hunger strikers have suspended their strike after the Israeli prison service agreed to allow family visits for the first time. The hunger strikers didn't achieve their objective of being freed or being returned to Jordan to serve their remaining sentences, but never the less it was a victory considering that some of them have not been allowed to see their families for 13 years.

All the men have lost around 30kg in weight and some have lost their ability to walk and are confined to wheelchairs. It was a torturous 100 days with the Israeli prison service putting immense pressure on the men to stop their strikes.

Mohammad Al-Rimawi, who suffers from a heart disorder where sometimes his heart beat is 125 and sometimes it drops to 50 beats per minute, was denied his medicine by the Israeli Prison Service until he agreed to stop his hunger strike. The day before he stopped - on his 99th day without food - on the eve of Eid, 5 soldiers shackled his hands and legs and threw him from his hospital bed to the ground and began savagely beating him with not a single Israeli doctor or nurse coming to his defense. The officers told Mohammad Al-Rimawi that they can treat him with violence and force with impunity because of lack of international attention on him and in particular Jordan who will not lift a finger to help him.

Two weeks before on 26th June 2013 the Israeli guards had brutally attacked Abdullah Al-Barghouti, again whilst he was in hospital - they dragged him from his hospital bed to the concrete floor and kicked him in the face leaving him bleeding. When a lawyer visited him on 7th August his condition remained critical, with problems with his liver, low blood pressure and constant migraines. Unable to walk, he is left shackled to his bed with threats of force feeding should he fall into a coma.

Under these conditions it was a miracle that the prisoners managed 100 days of hunger strike. That in itself was their victory. The defeat was ours - the prisoners gave activists around the world 100 days to mobilize and pressure the Jordanian government in to action.. but we failed them.

Now the only Jordain prisoner still on hunger strike is Ala' Hammad and his condition is very precarious. On 5 August Hammad fainted and remained unconscious for five hours, ignored by the Israeli doctors. After finally receiving treatment Hammad regained consciousness.

Currently there are 26 Jordanian citizens that Israel has confirmed are in its prisons and another 21 missing which Israel has not accounted for. There are also unmarked Ďnumbered gravesí of Jordanians who have died in prison..

The screen at Al Quds Day 2013 shows the father of the Jordanian child prisoner Mohammed Mehdi Saleh Suleiman
clinging to a photo of his son who has been abducted by Israel

Placard from previous protest showing brutality of Jordanian security services
against the families of the Jordanian prisoners in Israeli jails

One of the 26 is the child prisoner Mohammad Mahdi Saleh Suleiman. Now 17 years old, he is the youngest Jordanian in an Israeli prison. He has been severely tortured at Al Jalame - the notorious Israeli children's dungeon. One of the missing 21 Jordanians is Laith Al-Kinani, he has been missing for 6 years. Mohammed Mahdi's father and Laith's parents have protested everyday for the last three months in front of the Jordanian Parliament and Royal Palace with no response from the government.

There have been over 90 demonstrations in Jordan by the families of the prisoners - elderly mothers standing in the burning sun, at several protests each day! Even a 22km solidarity march from one city to another.. All of this falling on deaf ears with the Jordanian government shamefully abandoning the prisoners and according to some accounts even pressuring the prisoners to give up their hunger strike.

Terrified by the iron will of the families and friends of the hunger strikers to relentlessly carry on protesting everyday and the support and respect they garner in wider society and the resulting momentum building up to end the states total submission to every whim of the Zionist enemy, the Jordanian security services have come down very hard on the protesting families. Family members have been threatened with arrest if they persist to champion their loved ones in Israeli dungeons. They dragged away a 16 year old boy, a nephew of one of the hunger strikes, to prison and locked him up for 3 days - his crime was to hand out a leaflet about his uncles' imprisonment in an Israeli prison. On another occasion, wearing military camouflage uniforms that have never seen service on the enemy front line, the security forces with batons drawn, attacked a peaceful protest with plain cloths security service personnel cowardly targeting hunger striker Muneer Meree's brother, assaulting him before disappearing back behind the uniform lines.

Its with this backdrop of intimidation, that we made contact with activists in Jordan. The families and campaigners in Jordan courageously, at great personal risk to themselves, asked us to help internationalise the campaign by protesting in solidarity with them in London. Having protested twice outside the Jordanian Embassy in London we will now notch the campaign up a gear by targeting Jordanian interests in the UK starting on 19th August with a protest outside the Jordan International Bank in Knightsbridge, which is partly owned by the Jordanian government, and then on 13th September a protest outside the Royal Jordanian Airlines office in Hammersmith.

Friday 13th September 4:30-6:30pm - Royal Jordanian Airlines

We will protest in solidarity with Ala' Hammad's continued hunger strike, and for the child prisoner Mohammad Mehdi Saleh Suleiman and for the missing son Laith Al-Kinani and for the release of all the Palestinian prisoners. Lets not fail them, please join us on both these protests.

Between these two protest, on 30th August we will restart our regular protests outside G4S HQ for its complicity in the torture of Palestinian children including Mohammad Mahdi Saleh Suleiman and the other 'Hares Boys'. Mohammad was tortured at Israel's Megiddo and Al Jalame prisons - both secured by G4S.

FREE THE HARES BOYS - PROTEST G4S COMPLICITY IN THEIR TORTURE

Friday 30th August 5:00-7:00pm - G4S Headquarters

Live updates during protest

We will, inshAllah, be tweeting live (hash tag 19th Aug: #ShameOnJordan 30th Aug: #FreeHaresBoys 13th Sept: #ShameOnJordan ) from the protest with live photos being uploaded to our twitter and facebook page. So if you can't join us on the day, please help us by sharing the photos as they get uploaded.

The Palestinian Prisoners Campaign aims to raise awareness for the plight of Palestinian prisoners and build solidarity for their struggle and work towards their freedom. The campaign was launched by Innovative Minds (inminds.com) and the Islamic Human Rights Commission (ihrc.org) on the occasion of Al Quds Day 2012 (on 17th August 2012), since then we have held actions every fortnight in support of Palestinian prisoners, if you can spare two hours twice a month then please join the campaign by coming to the next action.

"Scalp bounties were the payment of a fee for proof of death of an Indian, any Indian, on a graduated scale. At the top of the scale they would pay the highest amount for proof of death by way of the production of a scalp, or bloody red skin - origin of the term 'red skins' - of an adult male Indian. Half that fee would be payed for proof of death by the same means of a adult female, quarter to be payed for proof of death of a child, child being defined as as a human being under 10 years of age down to and including a fetus.. every single colony on the east coast, every state of the Union and territory of the United States within the confines of the 48 contiguous states, had in place, in some period of its history, a scalp bounty - removed usually when there were no longer sufficient number of Indians left to kill to warrant its continuation..that's as absolutely clinical a genocidal policy as is possible to envision, they weren't interested in any particular Indians, any Indians would do and they would pay for proof of death - they wanted all of us dead."